Plea for help was a hoax
Alex Coolman
A distress call from a sinking ship in Newport Beach waters had Coast
Guard rescuers mobilized briefly Sunday before the callers admitted their
report was a hoax.
The Coast Guard office in Long Beach received a report shortly after
3:30 p.m. that a boat traveling from Newport Beach to Catalina was taking
on water. Seventeen people were said to be on the boat, according to
Victor Blalack, a lieutenant commander with the Coast Guard.
Rescuers, including a Coast Guard helicopter, rushed into action. But
10 minutes later the callers admitted they were lying.
The exact origin of the call has not been determined, Blalack said.
But the Coast Guard said it came from the vicinity of the Newport Harbor
area.
Blalack noted that the Federal Communications Commission does not
smile on such fake reports.
“There’s some pretty severe penalties if we catch them, and that’s the
problem -- catching them,” he said.
Blalack said the false reports are a concern, not only because they
use expensive resources but also because they tie up rescue vehicles that
might be needed in a real emergency.
Victor Lopez, the telecommunications specialist who took the call,
said the details of the report did not seem legitimate to him from the
start.
“We were pretty confident it was bogus,” Lopez said. “But they said 17
people. I don’t want 17 souls on my head.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.